#opg $OPG What keeps standing out on OpenGradient isn’t the proof delay itself.
It’s how quickly an answer can start influencing decisions before the full verification path is complete.
The Fast Layer delivers value instantly. That’s the point. Users get responses without waiting for settlement.
But while the answer is already visible, the Secure Layer is still building the proof trail, settlement trace, and verification record.
That creates an interesting question.
If a queue, review process, or operational decision moves the moment the answer appears, which layer actually drove the outcome?
The Fast Layer that produced the response first?8 route, or proof history behind that decision, the answer may already have shaped the process long before full-node settlement finished.
In HACA, speed and verification are intentionally separated.
The real question is whether the queue waits for both.
@OpenGradient
It’s how quickly an answer can start influencing decisions before the full verification path is complete.
The Fast Layer delivers value instantly. That’s the point. Users get responses without waiting for settlement.
But while the answer is already visible, the Secure Layer is still building the proof trail, settlement trace, and verification record.
That creates an interesting question.
If a queue, review process, or operational decision moves the moment the answer appears, which layer actually drove the outcome?
The Fast Layer that produced the response first?8 route, or proof history behind that decision, the answer may already have shaped the process long before full-node settlement finished.
In HACA, speed and verification are intentionally separated.
The real question is whether the queue waits for both.
@OpenGradient